News location:

Canberra Today 9°/12° | Sunday, May 12, 2024 | Digital Edition | Crossword & Sudoku

Best give the millions back, Brittany

Brittany Higgins leaves the ACT Supreme Court in October. (AAP Image/Mick Tsikas)

Given what we know now compared to last year, legal affairs columnist HUGH SELBY says there’s an argument of “unjust enrichment” and that Brittany Higgins should give the taxpayers’ money back. 

THANKS to the mainstream media coverage of the police investigation, the trial, the decision to not have a second trial, the Sofronoff Inquiry and last week’s torrent of information, we are well placed to look both back and forward at the Brittany Higgins saga.

The looking back is to imagine what would have happened if the decision last year had been to have a second trial in which Bruce Lehrmann was the accused.  This article aims to help you to make up your mind about how that would have ended.

The looking forward is to imagine how as honest, informed advisers to government this week, we would set out the next steps to deal with whatever payout of taxpayer funds was made to Ms Higgins. Leaving aside information kept from us (but possibly known to some police, lawyers, and media) does the available information entail that Ms Higgins should keep or repay the settlement monies that she received?

A second trial

Remember, the prosecution must prove its case against the accused beyond a reasonable doubt.

It is not the job of the defence to prove anything in a case such as this one.

Experienced, competent police, prosecutors, and defence advocates tell their witnesses to stay well clear of media. Why? Because it creates a record that can find its way before the trial fact finder, be that 12 jurors or a judge sitting alone.

If there is such a record, then a skilled prosecutor, properly using the tests to go to trial or not, must consider whether the media reports can be dealt with in chief by “confess and avoid”, along with how well or badly the witness is likely to fare when cross-examined by the defence advocate.  There’s an explanation of “confess and avoid” here.

A skilled defence advocate, armed with all the material now shared with us, must decide how to organise it into topics, in what order to present it, and with what tone and pace as they cross-examine.

It’s the answers, not the questions, that are the evidence for the fact finder. However, it is both the question content and the style of the question delivery that build up a feeling in the audience, as surely as film music evokes our emotions as we watch a film.

Popular films reflect popular tastes and interests. Apart from romance it’s heroes and villains that draw us in. A criminal trial doesn’t have the energy of “Fast and Furious” or the “how-close-to-death” moments of “sniper” drama.

However, as an audience – be that as jurors or watchers in the public gallery – we are watching a high-stakes fight between a claimed heroine or hero and a possible villain. Who will wear the victim label when it’s all over?

Each of them is helped by a black-robed knight.  The referee (judge), also black robed, sits above the fray.

Every person in that courtroom, including us, brings popular sentiment with them to the fight. That sentiment is the background musical score to whatever are the extra tracks played in the trial.

The background score in these trials is loud and somewhat overplayed these days. There is a catchy, hard-to-mute insistence that all complainants are victims, that all accused are villains. To victims and villains let us add “V” for vengeance.

That score can play well in public, but it can be like a scratch on a vinyl record (pre-digital technology) – ruining everything else that needs to be heard in a courtroom.

The defence team for a second trial now has available to them a rather large selection of materials (larger than in 2022) from which to fashion its cross examination.

Here, lacking sufficient information, I ignore any possibilities that might arise from the timing of publicity, any book deals, any assistance from an experienced media person and health issues for the complainant. We are restricted to the following, widely published information with which to build their possible cross-examination:

Complainant’s background (phase 1):  a well-educated adult; well informed as to how to respond to unwanted sex: aware of 24/7 help from sexual assault centres, rape crisis service, police, victims services; aware of a “victim centric” approach  – all instantly available – all of them available whether or not the person goes forward with civil and/or criminal proceedings.

The cross examination will focus upon showing the audience that, despite all that knowledge, the complainant chose not to follow it. Moreover, it will bring out that a well-educated complainant would want to make immediate use of these confidential services to prevent an unwanted pregnancy or any sexually transmitted disease.

Complainant’s background (phase 2): a well-educated adult; well-informed as to the need to preserve evidence, especially where there is no other evidence.

The cross examination will focus upon the failure to go promptly to the nearby sexual assault centre where evidence could have been collected; the absence of any scientific evidence that would support the claims if quickly collected – referring to her body, her clothes, the sofa in the office, and possibly phone records.

Presentation of both parties:  were either he or she drunk?; is there any evidence that he plied her with drinks or spiked her drink?

The cross examiner will remind everyone of the early assertions that both were drunk and that he plied her with alcohol. It will then show the video record (shown on the Channel 7 interview with Mr Lehrmann) that shows neither of them to be unsteady, and she’s well able to take off, put her shoes back on and walk.

The cross examination will also go to his bank records to show that he didn’t spend much on drinks. She will be shown those records and confronted with the gap between her earlier statement/s and what these records reveal. [Whether and when these records become evidence depends on other issues that we can ignore here.]

The cross examination will draw out that as she was not drunk/hungover there was no impediment to her seeking out security staff asap and making a complaint.

The cross examiner will loop back to the failure to go to the sexual assault centre and then build on that. As she was not drunk/hungover there was no impediment to her going to the nearby hospital sexual assault centre – not necessarily to allege rape – but to take proper precautions against pregnancy and any sexually transmitted disease, which she would do if sex had occurred. That would be so whether such sex was consensual or not.

Then the cross examiner can do a dance. Not being drunk she could and should have carefully secured her clothes for later evidence assessment; not being drunk she would want to carefully keep her phone history; not being drunk, and invested in women’s rights, she would want to involve the work management team – namely the politician she served, and the chief of staff – both of whom are women.

Some will say that she was in fear of losing her job.  That would have come out in her examination-in-chief by the prosecutor. It will now be taken apart.

That happens with the coup de grace, wholly in sorrow, never in anger.  It would take Ms Fiona Brown’s account (shared in great detail with us this past weekend) that the prosecution would have to call as evidence in their case. Let us assume that Ms Brown’s account is persuasive. Then, why did you lie about the chief of staff? Why did you lie about a person who went out of her way to help you?

It’s up to readers to decide what all this means in terms of any doubt.

Negotiated monetary settlement

For undisclosed reasons the federal government negotiated a financial settlement with the complainant shortly before Christmas.

There have been repeated media claims that the sum was around $3 million dollars.  The complainant is reported to have said it was less.

Attempts to have either party come clean as to how much was paid and why have failed.  There’s  further background information here.

Ms Brown’s account (in the “Weekend Australian”), coupled with material shown on Channel 7’s interview with Mr Lehrmann, call into question any factual basis for a payout.

Noting again that there may be compelling material not shared with the public, there is a need for we taxpayers to be assured that the bases leading to that payment have not been upended by the recent revelations.

If the facts, as known last year, have been upended, then the complainant and the government must consider whether all or any part of the payment would now be viewed as “unjust enrichment”.

If so, the complainant had best pay it back.

Hugh Selby’s free podcasts on “Witness Essentials” and “Advocacy in court: preparation and performance” can be heard on the best known podcast sites.

When the presumption of innocence is put in jeopardy

Why we have a right to know how much Higgins was paid

Who can be trusted?

In a world of spin and confusion, there’s never been a more important time to support independent journalism in Canberra.

If you trust our work online and want to enforce the power of independent voices, I invite you to make a small contribution.

Every dollar of support is invested back into our journalism to help keep citynews.com.au strong and free.

Become a supporter

Thank you,

Ian Meikle, editor

Hugh Selby

Hugh Selby

Share this

107 Responses to Best give the millions back, Brittany

Ian Hawkins says: 12 June 2023 at 4:16 pm

We also need to know what sort of person would leave a young woman naked on a leather couch, and why was the office spotlessly cleansed when it was a crime scene.

Reply
Deb says: 13 June 2023 at 7:59 am

This has been dealt with ad nauseum. PH security staff were not aware of any nefarious activity, and requested the cleaners ensure the Minister’s office was ready for use on Monday as it had been used.

Reply
Donna says: 15 June 2023 at 5:41 am

That minister’s office gets “used” everyday but they don’t take the furniture out and have it dry cleaned externally everyday. The furniture in the prayer room doesn’t get dry cleaned and that’s where all the “well known” nefarious activity goes on.

Reply
Robynne Morton says: 13 June 2023 at 11:50 am

We also need to know why security guards let them in in, in the first place? They should have lost their jobs too!

Reply
Zedd says: 13 June 2023 at 3:22 pm

It’s not the security guards job to turn away ministerial staffers from entering ministerial suites.
Their job is to stop non pass holders from entering Parliament house at all.

Reply
Peter murray says: 13 June 2023 at 8:39 pm

Correct. They did not have their passes so had to sign in then prove their identities. The Security lady was meticulous, even checking with her boss that her procedure was correct. The office was cleaned because of normal procedure. No one suggested it was a crime scene. Please, check your knowledge of a situation before sounding off.

Reply
Ian Wickham says: 15 June 2023 at 4:41 am

I would suggest most of us would want our day in court to prove our innocence if we were accused of a crime but it seems not all !

Reply
Gordon says: 13 June 2023 at 10:27 pm

How Parliament works is like an animal managery that claws and fights at each other like a gang of alley cats. And Albanese was supposedly going to clean this up. Pull the other one that plays Jingle Bells!

Reply
Kathy VanDuren says: 14 June 2023 at 10:16 am

The office was cleaned because there was no suggestion that a crime had been committed. Was the Senator to leave her office uncleaned for months before Brittany made a statement to the police? It would have been totally contaminated by then.
It is the small inconsistencies that Brittany has told that contributes to her credibility. For example, what’s with the jacket? I’m sure Senator Reynolds would have not minded her borrowing it (many of you are aware of the ‘walk of shame’). And the dress? Completely understandable if she had it cleaned immediately.

Reply
Rob says: 14 June 2023 at 11:59 am

No one has mentioned here that Higgins claims are allegations not tested in a court. Lehrmann under our legal system is entitled to the presumption of innocence until a court says otherwise. The fact that the case was dropped before any conclusion in a court was reached says more for the ACT Public Prosecutors methodology and motivations, the trial by media before and during Lehrmann’s trial and the standard of the evidence produced by the ACT DPP. Lehman’s guilt or innocence was about to be determined by a flawed legal process until the judge rightly dropped the case.

Lehrmann doesn’t get his day in court and neither does Higgins. The rest was a grubby attempt by some politicians to weaponise sexual assault against one side of politics by the other and now it has rightly backfired.

Reply
Ian Wickham says: 15 June 2023 at 4:35 am

Lehrmann refused to take the stand. Why wouldn’t an innocent person want the truth to be known under oath?

Reply
jennifer manson says: 19 June 2023 at 10:10 am

Cross-examination is pretty upsetting for most people and leads to doubts about credibility, as we’ve seen. People are often advised to avoid it if they can.

Reply
Robert says: 14 June 2023 at 1:19 pm

I have never in my life heard of the DPP dropping any case let alone a sexual assault case due to the mental health of the complaint. Maybe this happens in ACT but would never happen in NSW

Reply
Bruce Carmichael says: 12 June 2023 at 5:10 pm

I echo Ian’s comments. Why was the office cleaned? Why does ACT have the lowest charge outcomes in Australia. Articles like this will inhibit anyone coming forward in the future.

Reply
Alexander Ramsay says: 13 June 2023 at 12:02 am

Thankyou Mr Selby for thought and humour. Let’s work on time lines here in The House of Cards. Let’s say we are playing with a full deck. Start with CTV . Entry and Exits and all the walk ins, walk outs inbetween . Check with phones use. Then start, you show me yours and I will show you mine. … Lets see who has the full hand.

Reply
Disgusted at the Canberra BoysClub says: 12 June 2023 at 11:33 pm

I absolutely echo Ian’s comments. Brittany’s compensation is pitiful for what she went through. The security guards that found her should have called police immediately. Senator Reynolds should have cordoned off her office preserving the evidence. Then there was the “mystery juror”. Boys club in Canberra is working as it always did.

Reply
Ben says: 13 June 2023 at 3:47 pm

Face the facts. Give the money back, Brittany.

Reply
Yvonne James says: 13 June 2023 at 6:08 pm

Yes definitely pay the money back. It belongs to tax payers

Reply
Kim says: 15 June 2023 at 7:44 am

Why do we have a workplace where people can consume alcohol & return to work? Does it matter how many drinks she had? Is there no maximum hours staffers can be expected to attend? There is an imbalance of power, even if there was consensual sexual activity it is not right that it happened at work.

Reply
Judy W says: 13 June 2023 at 8:26 am

This has been a disaster however the Labor Party have done this deal it’s not Brittanys error. The Labor members responsible should return the money themselves. This may wake them up for any other deals they may have coming out of taxpayers money. There has to be accountability and Labor need to reimburse the Government money asap.

Reply
Robynne Morton says: 13 June 2023 at 11:48 am

No victim here. Even Grace Tame is now keeping her distance.

Reply
Graeme says: 13 June 2023 at 9:20 pm

Where IS Grace?

Reply
cbrapsycho says: 15 June 2023 at 8:58 am

Probably trying to live her life in peace. She copped so much flak for her revelations. The attacks on people who speak out are horrendous. Clearly many people and some institutions would rather these abuses stayed hidden. They don’t want transparency and they don’t want perpetrators punished. Grace is entitled to her life, especially after all she suffered at the hands of a paedophile teacher.

Reply
cbrapsycho says: 13 June 2023 at 8:57 am

Both Ian Hawkins & Bruce Carmichael raise important issues not yet addressed and largely ignored by the media. We need to know what happened here.

Whilst I’ve learned a lot from Hugh Selby’s commentary, there is clearly a lack of understanding of the psychology of sexual abuse victims and lack of acknowledgement of Brittany Higgins vulnerability in being the new person in the office just beginning her career. She was not in a well-known environment where she knew how everything worked and did not have the ready credibility of more experienced and longstanding staffers. It is likely that she would not have known how to respond for the best outcome in the moment, if she had been assaulted.

Even if you are well-educated in an academic sense, it does not mean you know of the availability of services for sexual assault victims, nor how to access them when distressed. When people are traumatised, they do not think clearly so their actions or inaction will often appear strange to observers. The way a person reacts to such a situation is not standard or the same for each person, as much depends on their personal situation, recent and longer term life history. To expect rational logical well thought through behaviour of a traumatised person is somewhat ridiculous.

Sexual assault victims express embarassment, shame and fear of being judged, as well as a sense of feeling stupid for allowing it to happen and they know that others may see it that way. As a result, they often hesitate to report and frequently do not report the assault at the time. Feeling vulnerable, they may not feel up to the daunting task of presenting themselves to strangers, whether health workers or police, let alone answering lots of invasive questions. Who would?

Reply
Ben says: 13 June 2023 at 3:49 pm

Stop making excuses. I don’t beleive her for a second.

Reply
cbrapsycho says: 14 June 2023 at 6:12 am

@Ben – I am not making excuses for anyone, as like you and most others (if not all) who make comments here, I do not know exactly who did what when where or why. I have shared what I know about the impact of sexual assault on victims to inform people reading this article.

Whether or not you, or I believe her is irrelevant, as we don’t have all the facts. None of us do. Anyone who has reached a conclusion is making many assumptions to fill in their knowledge gaps. Assumptions are not facts. Beliefs are not facts.

It was assumptions and beliefs that led to overconfident and ill-informed conclusions in the conviction of Lindy Chamberlain, Kathleen Folbigg and numerous other people, all of whom were later freed when new facts were found, highlighting the flimsiness of the convictions.

Ever heard of the Dunning-Kruger effect? It is worth remembering.

Reply
Ray Williams says: 14 June 2023 at 6:56 pm

There has never been a conviction so how can anyone say that there was a rape? Was Higgins used by Labor to bring the government of the day down? Was the $m payment for assistance to the Labor Party? So many questions unanswered! This has a long way to run yet!

Reply
Tim Le Mesurier says: 13 June 2023 at 1:25 pm

Unfortunately Selby confuses the standard for conviction with that for compensation. Perhaps he’s correct that a conviction beyond reasonable doubt may have always been difficult. Lack of physical evidence etc. A decision on compensation based on employer culpabilities and the balance of probabilities is another thing. I think most reasonable people knew that something went badly wrong that night, and that’s why compensation was paid.

Reply
cbrapsycho says: 13 June 2023 at 3:14 pm

Agree with Tim. One assumes the compensation is not for the alleged rape, but for the actions or inaction of those employed at Parliament House, whether ministers, staffers or public servants. There was a total lack of readily available HR mechanisms for supporting Higgins as well as comments and actions that denigrated her or left her to her own devices. This is a failing of government and should not be mixed up with the criminal trial.

Reply
Jae- Dee Collier says: 15 June 2023 at 2:02 am

I agree. Lack of appropriate response by many staffers in Parliament House. The HR response grossly inadequate. Failed to provide safe work environment for a female staff member. At least she was paid something for the trauma she received at her workplace.

Reply
Cathy says: 13 June 2023 at 1:59 pm

100% agree . Hugh Selbys post is well thought out with many important questions. He does however show lack of understanding regarding the trauma, sense of shame and embarrassmemt someone in Brittneys position may experience.. Doesnt matter how intelligent, or how much knowledge the person has, emotionally they are a human being who nevertheless may be aware of our brutal legal process, maybe not think straight, know they may be blamed or not believed, worry about loss ofcareer . The list goes on…..
Unfortunately the way this has played out everyone apart from.the lawyers has lost out

Reply
Dorothy Wilson says: 13 June 2023 at 4:43 pm

I think it is slack how no one in the media has found out why Brittany Higgins was paid so much of our money and what for? Keep the pressure on her to hand our money back!!

Reply
cbrapsycho says: 14 June 2023 at 6:16 am

The pressure needs to be on the government for transparency rather than non-disclosure agreements that hide the facts, especially regarding taxpayer money. They are the ones responsible for the decisions made.

Reply
Michelle Evans says: 13 June 2023 at 4:48 pm

Maybe it would be worthwhile to see the video footage of Britany leaving Parliament House. Was she distressed?? Did she take any time off work???? This story is totally bizarre.

Reply
CJ says: 14 June 2023 at 8:24 am

This article and many of the comments following are a perfect example of why victims of sexual assault and rape, mostly women, don’t report. Yes, forensic scrutiny is expected. You’ve just been raped, so here’s an internal vaginal examination by a stranger to kick things off. I understand why it’s necessary, but it feels like being violated all over again. Yes, tearing apart your character is expected. Any past missteps? They’ll be brought up and used against you. Every word, every action. Did she look drunk enough? Did she immediately take the right steps? Was she distressed enough???
Brittany may have been aware of the services available to her, but then she also may have been aware of the long and harrowing road ahead. A decision to enter that process, especially in the political landscape Brittany is in, would have been incredibly difficult and not one that you make quickly or easily immediately after being traumatised and the confusion that follows. Women are so often told that we “asked for it” and we bear the blame, and the shame.
I agree this case is muddy and confusing, but many rape and sexual assault cases are. It doesn’t make it a conspiracy to undermine conservative government! The public lynching is putting us back years in terms of victim’s confidence in coming forward. Having gone through this same process 20 years ago, I would be hard pressed to see how anything has improved.

Reply
Eden says: 13 June 2023 at 5:40 pm

Total stitch up to undermine conservative government. The hypocrisy and deceit of the parties involved is mind boggling.

Reply
Dennis lees says: 13 June 2023 at 8:06 pm

Why wasn’t a lie detector used on Britney?

Reply
Bonnie says: 13 June 2023 at 11:00 pm

Because lie detectors have been proven repeatedly to be inaccurate and are therefore inadmissible in court

Reply
cbrapsycho says: 14 June 2023 at 6:57 am

Lie detectors are highly inaccurate as shown by many years of research into their effectiveness. The biological changes they measure can be caused by any number of factors that are nothing to do with lying. That’s why we don’t generally use them in Australia. They can lead to ill-informed, harmful and unjust conclusions.

They’re still used In America, where many falsely believe that torture results in useful information, when all the research done over many decades shows that it does not. It results in inaccurate information which may often falsely implicate and harm others, as people will say anything to stop the torture. These scientifically proven facts are well-known but were ignored in the interrogations and waterboarding that occurred there or in offshore locations. Why? Ignorance of the science for some, personal ambition for others.

Reply
Peter Connor says: 13 June 2023 at 8:54 pm

Many responders seem to still be assuming Brittany was raped . Even Tania refers to her as ‘ an alleged rape victim ‘ . Surely before someone can be convicted of committing a crime , it must first be established a crime has occurred . Where is the evidence of what crime ? It seems the fiance was very committed to having the situation escalated, and obviously found very willing allies in the media and the Labor Party .

Reply
Albie says: 13 June 2023 at 9:06 pm

Some confused, angry people in these comments. Sad. Whatever your gripe with the world is, I guarantee you that chasing angrily after this young woman will not solve it.

Reply
Tony says: 13 June 2023 at 9:15 pm

Is Lehrmann also entitled to a payout? He has also been traumatised. Too many unexplained payouts. Higgins and before her Miller and the Alan Tudge affair which was $600,000.

Reply
Bonnie says: 13 June 2023 at 10:59 pm

Quite a ghoulish article here ignoring decades of research into victims reactions to crimes. Guess a woman who according to CCTV at the bar had 11 drinks before coming back with Mr Lehman’s wasn’t drunk like he testified, but still managed to get nude and be found by security.

Lehman’s story has as many or more holes in it than Higgins, and unlike her he hasn’t been cross examined. Should be interesting what other matters about him may arrise or how he will do being called to the stand in the defamation trial (which unlike the criminal one he can’t avoid testifying at if called).

Reply
Jillian says: 17 June 2023 at 8:17 am

Police barely thought it was worth questioning Lehrmann and didn’t seem concerned about the glaring inconsistencies in his recollections but questioned Brittany multiple times, took her phone, picked through every word.
They visited her doctors, her pharmacists, and took copies of notes made by the Rape Crisis Centre and a counsellor. They noted gossip about her sexual history, though this never could form part of any prosecution brief.
At one stage, some police involved wondered whether interviewing Lehrmann was even necessary. After interviewing Lehrmann detectives were willing to overlook manifest inconsistencies in his evidence, including three separate, mutually exclusive, explanations about why he had gone to Parliament House.

Reply
R says: 13 June 2023 at 11:34 pm

Who was the mystery security guard she was texting at PH? Seems the defence couldn’t pursue that line of questioning as it got shut down by the judge and prosecution.

Reply
John says: 14 June 2023 at 1:45 am

I believe both Higgins and Lehrmann are victims in this case. The lack of evidence does not prove that a sexual assault either did or did not take place. The real perpetrators here are Higgins’ boyfriend, two members of the ALP and media who chose to defy police and weaponise the situation. In doing so, Lehrmann has suffered a trial by media of a crime he may very well not have committed.
There is a stronger case that Higgins has been used to create a sex scandal to attack the then Liberal Government. It looks to me that the payout to Higgins is more a pay off.

Reply
Anne Warburton says: 14 June 2023 at 8:11 am

I still say who goes to their workplace after hours who jumps in a cab just for the lift,if she was so drunk should’ve got her own cab and gone home , since there was a stop at Work Place should’ve got the the driver to take her home 3 things she should’ve done and didn’t do.
Could’ve drank responsibly
Should’ve got her own cab
Would’ve got home safe
What unproven Rape case has ever been paid that kind of money

Reply
cbrapsycho says: 14 June 2023 at 12:02 pm

@ Anne – It is comments like yours that prevent people from reporting when they’re assaulted. That is what they expect to be told, so they don’t tell anyone as they’re already feeling so vulnerable that they couldn’t bear another attack like yours. Clearly you’ve never made a mistake or done something silly that went wrong. Lucky you.

Reply
Maryanne says: 14 June 2023 at 6:26 pm

Cbrapsycho, you certainly have a lot to say on this matter and don’t seem to appreciate that other people have a right to their views and questions – sarcasm won’t help your case. I am a woman, I have experienced physical and domestic violence and there are so many questions that need to be asked and answered in regards to this case and payout. Unfortunately security staff have probably faced far too many instances of what many of us would think is unacceptable behaviour in the various houses of parliament. If they asked questions or raised such matters they would probably be sacked. Banning alcohol and drugs from parliament house and work events might be a very good start to reducing harm.

Reply
cbrapsycho says: 15 June 2023 at 9:40 am

Agreed that people have a right to their views and questions, including me. There was no intended sarcasm and I’m sorry if you interpreted my comments that way. This is a very important issue to me, having dealt with many victims of sexual assault, including many who did not report to police or anyone else at the time, because they feared the consequences. I don’t know what happened in this situation, but I know and fully understand the difficulties for those assaulted. I am trying to present that view to assist those who do not have that experience. I am sorry if my comments offend you, as that was not my intention.

Reply
Jay says: 14 June 2023 at 8:22 pm

@ cbrapsycho as a former Detective and Police Officer of over 32 years, your position that the public commentary will prevent genuine victims from coming forward is totally flawed. BH elected to bring this matter out in the open public domain and escalate it (with coercion from her boyfriend and the media) for political gain before even making an official complaint to the AFP. The Sofronoff Inquiry and leaked text messages are all evidence of this and clearly issues exist to her version, motivation and credibility. In all my years of conducting sexual assault and rape investigations genuine victims want justice not publicity. Applying the fundamental legal principle of the presumption of innocence and that no finding made that she was in fact even a victim of what was alleged, the compensation payout should ever have been made. I very much doubt there would have been any compensation forthcoming if a second trial had of proceeded. Questions surrounding this unfounded payout rightly remain. Hugh Selby is 100% right.

Reply
Cosmic says: 15 June 2023 at 1:58 pm

As an actual victim of sexual assault that was not reported, I can tell you that you are wrong. I didn’t report it because I knew that I would have to deal with people like you and with cross examination by the defence. I wasn’t mentally strong enough for that. It also would have been huge news in my little country town as he was from a prominent family and I was nobody. Did I want justice? Of course, but I knew that I was never going to get it. People don’t make rape allegations for fun. A tiny minority are false, but it’s a tiny minority. You should know that.

Reply
cbrapsycho says: 15 June 2023 at 5:36 pm

@Jay – Police don’t usually meet the genuine victims who fail to report. Your experience will be of people who do report, meaning that your knowledge of those who don’t report will be very limited. My case that victims will be put off by negative commentary on alleged victims is well researched, documented and proven repeatedly, so not at all flawed.

Reply
Dan says: 4 July 2023 at 9:47 am

Do most people that don’t report go to the media as an alternative ? Given your explanations around shame, guilt etc… wouldn’t reporting this in a confidential manner be far less impacting than taking it directly to the media?

Jillian says: 17 June 2023 at 8:34 am

@Anne Warburton, I’ve had too much to drink on a night out and shared a cab with a person known to me, as I’m sure many have – are we “asking for it”? Is it our fault if we are assaulted or raped?
We should be able to do these things and be safe.

Reply
Trent says: 14 June 2023 at 8:47 am

I stumbled across this piece, it totally reads as written by logical rational thinking male. Why are we still allowing this out of date commentary in 2023?

Reply
Edward says: 14 June 2023 at 1:42 pm

“Logical rational thinking ” is “out of date commentary”?

Reply
CW says: 15 June 2023 at 9:17 pm

Because humans don’t act rationally. How many people would follow the logical process set out by Hugh Selby under trauma or in shock? Logical rational thinking from a person not involved in the alleged incident, it’s easy to judge when you are removed from the situation.

Reply
Alex says: 14 June 2023 at 10:22 am

I believe Shane Drumgold stole Lehrmann’s presumption of innocence, followed by “No further trial now, but I’m pretty sure he’s guilty all the same.”

All the #meToo blind activists are now in full swing attempting to ‘debunk’ ‘rape myths’. A false rape allegation is impossible, unheard of, statistically improbable, etc.

The fact is, there now exist convenient legal and theoretical/psychological arguments to allow for any false rape allegation under any circumstance, however obvious or explicit, to be considered as a ‘real’ rape allegation.

Interesting to observe how many women are out here batting for Higgins. Good to see there are also some sensible women who look beyond the smoke and mirrors.

Reply
YAGO says: 14 June 2023 at 10:58 am

Is there a case to answer? Just who is the perpetrator here? We’re all opinionated, to a tragedy, alas we have absolutely no idea what really happened. We do know however that one of them got a hefty payment for an Assumption of guilt.

Reply
Dave says: 14 June 2023 at 11:52 am

This whole episode has done untold damage to future victims. How does a young victim know what to do after seeing this train wreck rollout. Passionate people on both sides are doing more damage to their own side than the other.
Higgins is definitely a victim in this as she was, at minimum, used as a weapon.
Arguing about research into victims’ reactions is pointless if you choose to ignore the psychology of people who might make false claims and rely on such research to mould their responses.
So both sides, before commenting, think about the potential victims, if someone you loved was raped or someone you loved was falsely accused of rape. What advice would you now give you son and daughter and based on that advice? Are you happy with the sort of society it is leading to?

Reply
Fred says: 14 June 2023 at 12:32 pm

Agree entirely
A court decision requires proof of guilt ‘Beyond reasonable doubt’.
Are we supposed to consider the evidence provided so far achieves that requirement. Of course not.
The money should be returned immediately.

Reply
Judith Sinclair says: 14 June 2023 at 1:10 pm

If had had been raped I would have gone to police then hospital
Put the clothes in a bag for DNA testing.

Reply
Cosmic says: 15 June 2023 at 2:54 pm

Haha, that’s so incredibly easy to say when you haven’t just been the victim of a sexual assault. It can affect you mentally as well as physically, so your reactions aren’t always logical.

Reply
Cat O’Brien says: 14 June 2023 at 1:18 pm

Each to their own. That money should be returned. I don’t believe her. I feel that she and her fiancé seem to be very knowledgeable of people who can ‘help’. One just got caught out in parliament yesterday. Ms Gallagher. The poor guy lost his opportunity for his day in court.
The previous government should have dealt with this. It ‘ happened’ on their watch.

Reply
Anne says: 14 June 2023 at 5:05 pm

He elected not to speak in court, it was not “taken from him”. He then chose to air his grievances on television. Neither side has covered themselves in glory here, and the truth of what happened that night will never be known.

The compensation was paid, as I understand it, for the multiple failures of the HR system in handling the complaint over a lengthy period, not for the alleged rape.

Reply
Mick says: 14 June 2023 at 1:41 pm

Brittany, give the taxpayers’ money back. Better still, tell the government to give it to the person most aggrieved by this whole saga.

Reply
Steven says: 14 June 2023 at 1:56 pm

To think that the major political office of our country is being run like this is the greatest embarrassment.
They should all be fired, no one can tell the truth anymore and they should all re-apply for their jobs.
This country will be taken over unless these goons can start acting like adults and do the job they are employed and voted in to do. I for one would take all their benefits away from them until they could show the Australian people that they deserve them.
Absolutely disgraceful representation of the Australian people..

Reply
Rebecca says: 14 June 2023 at 2:04 pm

Why is the mob frothing for Brittany rather than those that issued the payments? Someone in government signed off on it and has proceeded to make it confidential. I take far more issue with that then this absolutely revolting line of commentary about the girl herself.

Reply
Peter Lewis says: 14 June 2023 at 4:00 pm

At the end of day in time the truth will come out.for now in my opinion there wasn’t enough evidence to convict the accused.we all need to move on.

Reply
Icanteven says: 14 June 2023 at 4:32 pm

Unbelievable that victim blaming is so prevalent and even weirder is the theory that this is politically motivated set up.

Are people seriously suggesting that this is a fabricated story to smear the coalition?

It beggers belief! 2 years it was before Ms Higgins went public, Labor knew nothing until 4 days prior to that by the very evidence that you are relying on but you’re carrying on like this was some cunning, calculated plot.

In the meantime how did the media get the recording and text records? They weren’t provided by the owners.

It also seems that the coalition has erred mightily in chasing this story, it is not reflecting well on them as it just reminds everyone of how poorly everything was managed and now 2 of their own (Bragg & Archer) have spoken out against how they are pursuing this.

It seems clear that conservative Australia has lost the plot if this is the standard now.

Reply
Mal says: 14 June 2023 at 6:44 pm

No proof of a rape ,not reported either,too much vagueness. Just give the money back so it can be used for the needy.Or give it to charity

Reply
Concernedfather says: 14 June 2023 at 8:47 pm

Opening lines of the article “This article aims to help you to make up your mind about how that would have ended,” yet the title “give the millions back” and tone [deafness] of the article clearly lead the reader to the outcome this “opinion” piece is aiming for. So much for unbiased reporting. Call in #mediawatch.

No mention (apart from in the comments) about how harrowing rape can be for victims and the futher trauma of pursuing all these “avenues” available to victims and instead this entire piece just victim blames

Reply
Al says: 14 June 2023 at 11:27 pm

Regardless of who we choose to believe is telling the truth (Brittany or Bruce) The fact remains that the government of the day and her employer did not handle the situation as well as would be expected immediately after the event. The media circus, the public humiliation, the public shaming of a potential victim all add up to a fair compensation offer to be made.

Compensation paid by an insurance company to a worker is normally not made public and rightly so. The commonwealth self insures via comcare and should be held to the same standard as in other compensation cases. it shouldn’t be made public, however much the public feels entitled to know.

All the political argy bargy has caused more harm than good and likely scared future rape victims from coming forward. Leave them both alone, the truth may come out some day. I’m siding with Brittany here based on what i’ve heard and read, but that is my personal opinion only.

Reply
Raymond King says: 14 June 2023 at 9:25 pm

This whole affair should be referred to the new Federal Corruption Commission. The issues include misleading and lying to parliament by more than one Labor MP, Federal Labor, journalists, and Brittany Higgins colluding to bring down a sitting government; the circumstances why Higgins was awarded compensation and why did Higgins wait two years to make such a serious complaint to police, and why was she so uncooperative with police investigators? Without the Commission undertaking this affair, the public will never know the truth behind the Higgins affair because Federal Labor treats the voters in this country like mugs. There is no transparency or trust in the PM in his handling of this matter.

Reply
Ray King says: 14 June 2023 at 9:50 pm

The only way this will be resolved, where voters will learn the truth is for the whole matter to be referred to and investigated by the Anti-Corruption Commission.

Reply
Katherine Fitzgerald says: 15 June 2023 at 1:57 pm

Politics can be dirty and the aggressor often ends up being a victim for the rest of their working life.

Reply
Sam says: 15 June 2023 at 12:11 am

This is a shameless article, criticising a victim for not following the “textbook response” when few do, with complete disregard for the emotional turmoil these actions cause. Furthermore, I don’t recall when tieing up shoes became a solid test for intoxication.
Complete lack of empathy hidden behind a hypothetical court case. Just terrible.

Reply
Sean B. says: 15 June 2023 at 5:49 am

There’s a reason why the Coalition lost office and it wasn’t this. The (now) Opposition simply believes it has found a weak point in the government because it has failed in every other tactic it has tried to use. It tried an economic line on inflation and failed, it’s been running a racism line against the referendum and that will fail. Now they run a campaign against someone who claims they were raped in PH and those who would support her against her employer who seems to have done nothing to help her – just shameful.

Reply
Abby Coskun says: 15 June 2023 at 6:24 am

I’d rather Harvey Norman and every other big business that didn’t lose money during the pandemic pay that money back.
And still they’re making extra profits with the price hikes
It’s time we leave Brittany alone, she is the victim.

Reply
Michael Abbott says: 15 June 2023 at 9:54 am

How is it that the people who say they looked after Brittany including Reynolds, Cash and Browne were denied the opportunity to speak prior to the ALP approving compensation based on these same people not providing a duty of care. Given what we do know, there can be little doubt that Ms Higgins and Mr Sharaz were deeply motivated by money and vengeance. And are rewarded by the ALP for assisting their electability.

Reply
Ms Jones says: 15 June 2023 at 11:56 am

I call enough on the attacks on Brittany!
So what if she sought compensation. Many people do!
Brittany has shown tremendous strength in standing up for so many victims and survivors of sexual assault.
Why is it that most comments of non belief are from men… a little to close to home?

Reply
Alex says: 15 June 2023 at 10:25 am

@cbrapsycho

The number of impassioned, pro-Higgins posts you’ve made on this webpage demonstrates yourself to be victim of the Dunning-Kruger effect you mentioned in a post here. You just WANT Higgins to be your idealised victim and Lehrmann to be your idealised villain.

You show that you are incapable of giving any fair, reasonable consideration to any other possibility. Such as, what is the likelihood Brittany Higgins staged it all?

Reply
jennifer manson says: 16 June 2023 at 9:21 pm

You really believe that? The attempt at mind-reading is in fantasy land, completely illogical.

Reply
Deidre Oliver says: 15 June 2023 at 11:47 am

Enough already, leave her alone, $3m sounds like a lot but is nothing to compensate anyone for this circus, as she has lost her career and her privacy. It would have been a much larger payout if he was convicted. There are many grubby hands here so why not go after the people in positions of power who shirked their ‘duty of care’.

Reply
Alex says: 15 June 2023 at 12:41 pm

Listen to the recordings of the pre-planning which Brittany Higgins, Lisa Wilkinson and David Sharaz did (AFTER her ‘rape’). Does this in any way at all seem to be a person unable to work for 40 years, as the ‘compensation’ is meant to be for? I wonder who the ‘independent’ doctor is, who rubber stamped her complete inability to work at all, for the next 40 years.
Even people with amputations and major brain injuries could do better than ‘no work at all for 40 years’ and they may still be able to contribute to the workforce in some limited capacities. How does a health professional reasonably foresee an inability to work for the next 40 years in spite of numerous available therapies? Has she lost eyesight or a limb? Is the ‘psychological trauma’ for Brittany Higgins irreparable for 40 years, such that no amount of psychological or psychiatric therapy can help? The doctor or health professional who assessed her as such should be investigated closely.

Reply
Cait says: 15 June 2023 at 1:01 pm

Where’s the argument that a well educated man knows not to sexually assault a woman?
With this line of victim bashing… is it true that all educated and intelligent victims of domestic violence or assaults should have been “smart enough” to manage the situations?!

Reply
Alex says: 15 June 2023 at 7:59 pm

There is no evidence at all that a crime was committed and her story is not supported by the physical evidence that does exist. So she is not the victim, Lehrman is the victim.

Reply

Leave a Reply

Related Posts

Opinion

Those teddies in trees, what’s that all about?

"Heading east from Queanbeyan on the Kings Highway there’s remnants and new additions to the curious practice of teddies attached to trees, a feature for potentially as long as four decades," writes Yesterdays columnist NICHOLE OVERALL.

Follow us on Instagram @canberracitynews